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NeoReviews Vol.7 No.4 2006 e177
© 2006 American Academy of Pediatrics
* Royal Infirmary Edinburgh and University of Edinburgh School of Medicine, Edinburgh, Scotland
| The first 300 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
| Introduction |
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The last 5 years have seen dramatic changes in the consent process for necropsy in the United Kingdom. In January 2001, the Redfern Report was published, following an intensive inquiry into the removal, retention, and disposal of human organs and tissues after postmortem examinations in the Royal Liverpool Childrens Hospital NHS Trust. The Report described a "systematic" removal of organs, often without consent. Throughout the United Kingdom, pediatric pathologists and histopathologists felt vilified and abandoned, and longstanding shortages in the workforce were exacerbated. As a result of public anxiety, the necropsy rate declined dramatically. We cannot tell how many families have suffered because of the decrease in information to them as a consequence of this inquiry and the extraordinary media exposure.
In the following discussion, "necropsy" is our preferred word for the postmortem examination, deriving from "necros" or death. Autopsy is used more widely, but is literally "seen by oneself" from "autos"=self and "optos"=seen. Most postmortem examinations may be performed by one person, but usually are seen by several people.
| Purpose of the Necropsy |
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